Com. v. Collier, R. ( 2021 )


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  • J-S04029-21
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA                     IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
    OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellee
    v.
    RAMA L. COLLIER
    Appellant                 No. 1090 MDA 2020
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered July 21, 2020
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Centre County
    Criminal Division at No: CP-14-CR-0001161-2014
    BEFORE: OLSON, J., STABILE, J., and MUSMANNO, J.
    MEMORANDUM BY STABILE, J.:                     FILED: APRIL 7, 2021
    Appellant, Rama L. Collier, appeals from the July 21, 2020 judgment of
    sentence imposed after revocation of his probation. We affirm.
    On August 13, 2014, the trial court sentenced Appellant to two years of
    probation for theft by deception (18 Pa.C.S.A. § 3922). On three subsequent
    occasions, the trial court revoked and reinstated Appellant’s term of probation.
    On June 9, 2020, Appellant was arrested on a bench warrant for another
    violation. The trial court conducted a revocation hearing on July 16, 20201
    and, at its conclusion, sentenced Appellant to one to two years of state
    incarceration with credit for 38 days of time served. Appellant filed a timely
    ____________________________________________
    1  On July 8, 2020, Appellant waived his right to a Gagnon I hearing. See
    Gagnon v. Scarpelli, 
    411 U.S. 778
     (1973) (holding that due process requires
    a preliminary and final hearing prior to revocation of probation).
    J-S04029-21
    post-sentence motion on July 22, 2020. The trial court conducted a hearing
    on August 14, 2020, at which Appellant argued that the trial court could not
    revoke his probation based on a condition imposed solely by the probation
    officer, as opposed to the sentencing court. The trial court denied Appellant’s
    post-sentence motion at the conclusion of the hearing, and this timely appeal
    followed.
    Appellant presents a single question:
    I.    Did the court err in revoking probation on the basis of
    conditions imposed by a probation officer as the sentencing
    code does not permit this delegation of authority to impose
    conditions?
    Appellant’s Brief at 5.
    The sentence whose revocation is the subject of this appeal, imposed
    on February 14, 2020, required Appellant to “comply with all conditions, rules
    and regulations as required by the Centre County Probation and Parole
    Department [(hereinafter “County Probation”)].”       Judgment of Sentence,
    2/14/20.    Further, “The defendant shall refrain from the transportation,
    possession and/or use of any alcoholic beverages and/or non-prescribed
    drugs.” 
    Id.
     Among the conditions County Probation imposed was Condition
    Six: “You shall keep all appointments with your probation officer in accordance
    with the written and/or verbal instructions given to you by your probation
    officer.” N.T. Revocation Hearing, 7/16/20, at 4-5. Condition Seven provided,
    “You will consent to drug and alcohol testing in the form of urinalysis,
    breathalyzer, and/or blood test on demand by the Centre County Probation
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    Office, and you will be responsible for paying the cost of any positive test
    within 15 days.” Id. at 11.
    Appellant failed to appear at the County Probation office on Friday, June
    5, 2020 despite six phone messages, by either call or text from his probation
    officer, Thomas Donovan. Id. at 5. Appellant did not have a voice mail set
    up, but Donovan’s iPhone confirmed that his text messages were delivered.
    Id. Donovan texted Appellant early on Monday, June 8, 2020 and told him to
    call the office by 8:30 a.m. to schedule a urine test. Appellant did not respond
    until late that evening, sending Donovan pictures of self-inflicted cuts on his
    body and claiming to be depressed. Id. at 9-10, 12.
    Donovan first saw the picture message the following morning, June 9,
    2020.    Shortly thereafter, Donovan and several others went to Appellant’s
    home to perform a wellness check. Id. at 9-10. They knocked on Appellant’s
    door at 9 a.m. and heard movement inside, but Appellant did not speak or
    answer the door for several hours. Id. at 10-11. When Appellant finally spoke
    from within his home, he said he was going to barricade the door, and that
    his mother and girlfriend were present and would not be permitted to leave.
    Id. Appellant stated he would not come out alive. Id. at 10. Finally, between
    one and two p.m., authorities gained entry with a key supplied by the landlord
    and escorted Appellant out.      Id. at 11.   The Commonwealth argued that
    Appellant violated conditions six and seven of the terms of his probation—
    those being the requirements to keep appointments with his probation officer
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    and to submit to drug testing. The trial court agreed, and imposed sentence
    as set forth above.
    Appellant argues that the trial court erred in revoking his probation for
    violation of conditions imposed by County Probation rather than the
    sentencing court.     On review of a sentence imposed after revocation of
    probation, we examine the validity of the revocation proceedings and the
    legality of the new sentence, mindful of the trial court’s authority to impose
    consider any sentencing alternative that was available at the initial sentencing.
    Commonwealth v. Fish, 
    752 A.2d 921
    , 923 (Pa. Super. 2000), appeal
    denied, 
    771 A.2d 1279
     (Pa. 2001). Revocation of probation rests within the
    discretion of the trial court, and this Court will not disturb the trial court’s
    decision absent an abuse of discretion or error of law. Commonwealth v.
    Smith, 
    669 A.2d 1008
    , 1011 (Pa. Super. 1996).
    Appellant relies on Commonwealth v. MacGregor, 
    912 A.2d 315
     (Pa.
    Super. 2006), and Commonwealth v. Vilsaint, 
    893 A.2d 753
     (Pa. Super.
    2006), in which this Court examined the authority of a probation officer to
    impose conditions of probation.      In MacGregor, the trial court found the
    defendant in violation of a condition forbidding contact with persons under age
    18.   MacGregor, 
    912 A.2d at 316
    .        This Court vacated the judgment of
    sentence, reasoning that the trial court imposed no such condition. 
    Id. at 318
    . Rather, it appeared on a preprinted form of conditions that the defendant
    signed with his probation officer.    
    Id.
       In Vilsaint, the sentencing court
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    authorized the probation office to enroll the defendant in any program it
    deemed necessary. Vilsaint, 
    893 A.2d at 755
    . The preprinted sentencing
    form contained a list of conditions, including one prohibiting consumption of
    alcoholic beverages, but the sentencing court did not check the box for that
    condition.    Regardless, the probation officer ordered the defendant not to
    drink, and the trial court revoked probation based on the defendant’s violation
    of that condition. 
    Id.
     Because a prohibition on alcohol consumption is not
    the equivalent of enrolling the defendant in a program, and because nothing
    else in the sentencing court’s order authorized the condition whose violation
    was at issue, this Court concluded that the defendant’s counsel missed an
    issue of arguable merit.2 
    Id. at 757
    .
    Our Supreme Court examined a similar issue in Commonwealth v.
    Elliot, 
    50 A.3d 1284
     (Pa. 2012).           There, the sentencing court’s probation
    conditions included no unsupervised contact with a minor child. 
    Id. at 1285
    .
    The probation office imposed conditions broadly forbidding direct or indirect
    contact or communication with minors and loitering within 1,000 feet of an
    area where the primary activity would involve minors. 
    Id. at 1286
    . Probation
    officers then observed the defendant watching children at a park near the
    probation office. The defendant admitted to his probation officer that he was
    sexually aroused by a young girl he saw there. 
    Id. at 1286-87
    . A search of
    ____________________________________________
    2 Counsel in Vilsaint proceeded under Anders v. California, 
    386 U.S. 738
    (1967).
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    the defendant’s apartment revealed a journal documenting repeated trips to
    the park in question. The defendant’s journal also documented the fact that
    the children at the park reminded him of his prior sexual assault victims. Id.at
    1287.
    On appeal from the revocation of his probation, the defendant
    challenged the probation office’s authority to impose the conditions in
    question. After a thorough examination of the trial court’s authority to order
    probation (see 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9754) and the state board of probation’s
    authority to supervise (see 61 Pa.C.S.A. § 6131, et.seq.), the Supreme Court
    made several observations. First, only the trial courts, and not the probation
    offices, have the authority to impose terms and conditions of probation. Id.
    at 1291. Attendant to that, “the Board and its agents cannot impose any
    condition of supervision it wishes, carte blanche. The board may, however,
    “impose conditions of supervision that are germane to, elaborate on, or
    interpret any conditions that are imposed by the trial court.” Id. at 1292. “In
    summary, a trial court may impose conditions of probation in a generalized
    manner, and the Board or its agents may impose more specific conditions of
    supervision pertaining to that probation, so long as those supervision
    conditions are in furtherance of the trial court’s conditions of probation.” Id.
    The Supreme Court concluded that the condition forbidding the defendant to
    loiter within 1,000 feet of an area where minors gather was a permissible
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    derivative of the trial court’s prohibition of unsupervised contact with minors.
    Id.
    As set forth above, the sentencing order forbade consumption of
    alcoholic     beverages and    nonprescription   drugs.    Thus,   this case   is
    distinguishable from Vilsaint, in which the trial court imposed no such
    condition.     In furtherance of the trial court’s prohibition, County Probation
    required regular visits at which Appellant could be compelled to submit to
    urinalysis.    We find it obvious that these conditions are derivative and in
    furtherance of the trial court’s condition. Indeed, we fail to see how County
    Probation could discharge its obligation to supervise Appellant’s compliance
    with the terms of his probation sentence without imposing regular visits and
    drug tests.     The record establishes that Appellant missed several visits at
    which he was expected to provide a urine sample.             On one occasion,
    Appellant’s refusal to answer the door resulted in an hours-long standoff
    between Appellant and police.        Because the law and the facts support
    revocation this case, we discern no legal error or abuse of discretion on the
    part of the trial court.
    In hope of avoiding this conclusion, Appellant argues that Elliot is
    inapposite because it involved the authority of the state board of probation
    whereas this case involves County Probation.        We observe that Appellant
    raised the distinction between state and county authorities for the first time
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    in his Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement.3 For that reason, he has waived this issue.
    Pa.R.A.P. 302(a). Further, his argument on the merits of this issue is deficient
    in that Appellant fails to articulate any reason why the Elliot Court’s rationale
    should not apply with equal force in this case. Appellant cites no law that
    would forbid a county probation office to mandate regular appointments and
    drug tests and, as we have explained, it is unclear to us how County Probation
    could have discharged its supervisory role without them.
    Based on all the foregoing, we find no merit in Appellant’s assertion of
    error.
    Judgment of sentence affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 04/07/2021
    ____________________________________________
    3 Appellant’s written post-sentence motion did not raise any challenge to the
    validity of his probation conditions. At oral argument he claimed that County
    Probation’s conditions were outside the scope of the trial court’s sentencing
    order, but he did not argue any distinction between the authority of county
    and state probation offices. N.T. Hearing, 8/14/20, at 4.
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